Latest News | Bank of India Q4 Net Profit Rises Only 7 Pc as Non-core Income Plummets
Get latest articles and stories on Latest News at LatestLY. State-owned lender Bank of India on Friday reported only a 7 per cent rise in net profit to Rs 1,439 crore for the March quarter, impacted by higher provisioning and a decline in non-core income.
Mumbai, May 10 (PTI) State-owned lender Bank of India on Friday reported only a 7 per cent rise in net profit to Rs 1,439 crore for the March quarter, impacted by higher provisioning and a decline in non-core income.
For fiscal 2023-24, the bank's net profit rose 57 per cent to Rs 6,318 crore.
In the reporting quarter, the core net interest income (NII) grew 7 per cent to Rs 5,937 crore as a 0.23 per cent narrowing of net interest margin to 2.92 per cent was offset by a 13.52 per cent growth in global advances.
Its managing director and chief executive Rajneesh Karnatak told reporters that it will be targeting to maintain a credit growth between 13-14 per cent levels, and aims for 12-13 per cent deposit growth from the 10.21 per cent in FY24.
The non-interest income declined by 43 per cent to Rs 1,751 crore in the January-March period, dragged down by a sharp decline in profit from the sale of investments, which the bank management attributed to one-off gains on the security receipts front in the year-ago period.
The overall provisions for bad and doubtful assets rose 274 per cent to Rs 2,043 crore for the reporting quarter due to ageing provisions on assets and benefits from writebacks on standard asset provisions and depreciation on non-performing investments helped the bank's bottom line.
The gross non-performing assets ratio improved to 4.98 per cent at the end of the fiscal year from 5.35 per cent in December 2023.
Karnatak said the bank has a loan pipeline of Rs 50,000 crore, including Rs 38,000 crore in corporate loans, while the rest is from the retail and small business front.
The bank has spent Rs 2,600 crore over the last two fiscals to take care of its IT and technology requirements, he said.
The overall capital adequacy stood at 16.96 per cent as of March 2024, including the core buffer at 14.93 per cent.
The bank said the RBI proposals on project loans can impact the core buffer by 0.20 per cent and can also hurt credit costs. However, there will be an engagement with the regulator where the banks are pointing to its concerns.
The board has recommended a dividend of Rs 2.80, or 28 per cent, per equity share of face value Rs 10 each for the 2023-24, subject to approval at the ensuing annual general meeting.
The BoI scrip closed 0.11 per cent down at Rs 138.85 apiece on the BSE.
(The above story is verified and authored by Press Trust of India (PTI) staff. PTI, India’s premier news agency, employs more than 400 journalists and 500 stringers to cover almost every district and small town in India.. The views appearing in the above post do not reflect the opinions of LatestLY)